Gaseous emissions Maria Zevenhoven
Transcript of Gaseous emissions Maria Zevenhoven
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Green house gasesOzone depletion
Gaseous emissionsMaria Zevenhoven
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2/36Green house effect
• A hot topic......
• What is green house effect• Which gases cause the green house effect• Politicians decide: right or wrong, but chemical engineers have to
comply• CO2
• Ozone depleting gaseous emissions-green house effect
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3/36Greenhouse effect
source: Vesna Barisic
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4/36Comparison of greenhouse gases
Greenhouse gas (GHG)
Global warming potential (GWP)
CO2 1
CH4 21
N2O 310
HFCs 140-11700
PFCs 7400
SF6 23900
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5/36Greenhouse gas sources
• Energy balance influenced by– Changes in greenhouse gases and aerosols, – Changes in solar radiation – Changes in land surface properties
• = expressed in terms of radiative forcing, which is used to compare how a range of human and natural factors drive warming or cooling influences on global climate.
• Radiative forcing is a measure of the influence that a factor has in altering the balance of incoming and outgoing energy in the Earth-atmosphere system
• Index of the importance of the factor as a potential climate change mechanism.
• Positive forcing warms • Negative forcing cools
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6/36RF according to IPCC
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Greenhouse emission targets
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8/36Are we on track?
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9/36CO2 per source
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10/36CH4 per source
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11/36N2O per source
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12/36Fluorinated gas emissions
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CO2
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14/36Means to reduce CO2
• Improve energy efficiency• Switch to less carbon intensive fuels (Methanol, Fischer trops fuels)• Increase use of low or near zero carbon energy sources
(electricity, H2)• Biomass if sustainable grown• Sequester CO2 through enhancement of biological sinks
• Biomass• Ocean• Atmosphere• Sediment
• CO2 capture and storage• pre-combustion• post-combustion• transport• ocean storage• geological storage• mineral storage
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15/36CO2 Capture
Source IPCC, 2005
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16/36Post combustion CO2 capture
Disadvantages-High energy penalty-Degradation of sorbent by NOx and SOx (and O2)
Advantages– No new combustion plants
needed– Can be fitted to old or new plant– Has been demonstrated
Source IPCC, 2005
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17/36Pre-combustion CO2 capture
• Advantages– CO2 at high partial pressures– Solvent scrubbing is proven technology– Benefits from improved gas turbine designs
• Disadvantages– Partial oxidation or gasification is needed, adds complexity– Gasification is quite different from combustion– Not widely demonstrated, reliability is an issue
Coal
Coal preparation
gasification
O2
gas cooling and clean-up
H2O gas shift
H2S, CO2removal
synthesis
separation
liquid fuel
unconverted synthesis gas
H2O gas shift
CO2removalseparation
purge gas
H2
power island
electricity
H2Otransport and storageairASU
Source IPCC, 2005
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18/36Oxyfuel combustion capture
• Advantages– CO2 recycle doesn’t give
much problems– Significant NOx
reduction– Better heat transfer– Smaller amout of flue
gas
DisadvantagesHigh costs for O2Only demonstrated at small scale and special cases
Source IPCC, 2005
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19/36Capture in (high energy) industry
• The larger the plant, the better• Cement plants can use post-combustion or switch to oxyfuel• Iron and steel plants have many options (and are large !)• Oil refineries are in a similar situation as power producers (many
heaters and furnaces)• H2 and NH3 producers can use pre-combustion technology, but
amounts are small (but very attractive)• Natural gas producers can have high-CO2 gas, but also here for the
best cases the amounts are small
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20/36CO2 transport
• An important but not a major cost factor. Compression should not be forgotten.
• Pipelines are operated over large distances for all sorts of gases under sometimes extreme conditions.
• Pipelines of CO2 are not new, in use for > 2500 km.
• ”Pipeline quality” CO2 should be dry and free of H2S (avoiding corrosion).
• Alternatively, marine tankers canbe used, or even rail or road tankers.
Source IPCC, 2005
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21/36Geological storage options
Source IPCC, 2005
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22/36Leakage form CO2 storage
Source IPCC, 2005
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23/36Ocean storage
Source IPCC, 2005
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24/36Mineral storage of CO2
Source IPCC, 2005
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25/36Maturity of capture systems
Source IPCC, 2005
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26/36Summary
• Wether greenhouse effect is caused by humans or not is not a issue in this course.
• CO2 greenhouse gas available in largest amount, thus high priority
• Reduction– Improve energy efficiency– Switch to less carbon intensive fuels (Methanol, Fischer trops fuels)– Increase use of low or near zero carbon energy sources
(electricity, H2)– Biomass if sustainable grown– Sequester CO2 through enhancement of biological sinks – CO2 capture and storage
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Ozone depletion
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28/36Tropospheric ozone
http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Library/Aura/Aura_3.html
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29/36Tropospheric ozone
•Tropospheric ozone comes from several sources. • Biomass burning and industrial activity produce carbon monoxide (CO) and volatile organic compounds (VOCs) which are oxidized to form ozone. • Nitrogen oxides (NOx) from industrial processes, biomass burning, automobile exhaust and lightning also form tropospheric ozone. • A small amount of tropospheric ozone also comes from the stratospheric ozone layer.
http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Library/Aura/Aura_3.html
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30/36Stratospheric ozone
http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Library/Aura/Aura_3.html
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31/36Stratospheric ozone
• The stratospheric ozone layer shields life on Earth from the Sun’s harmful ultraviolet radiation.
• Chemicals that destroy ozone are formed by industrial and natural processes.
• With the exception of volcanic injection and aircraft exhaust, these chemicals are carried up into the stratosphere by strong upward-moving air currents in the tropics. Methane (CH4), chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), nitrous oxide (N2O) and water are injected into the stratosphere through towering tropical cumulus clouds.
• These compounds are broken down by the ultraviolet radiation in the stratosphere.
• By products of the breakdown of these chemicals form “radicals”—such as nitrogen dioxide (NO2) and chlorine monoxide (ClO)—that play an active role in ozone destruction.
• Aerosols and clouds can accelerate ozone loss through reactions on cloud surfaces. Thus, volcanic clouds and polar stratospheric clouds can indirectly contribute to ozone loss
http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Library/Aura/Aura_3.html
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32/36 Production of Chlorine Radicals
In winter (no sunlight) formation of polar clouds.• Chlorine reservoir species HCl and ClONO2 (and their bromine
counterparts) are converted into more active forms of chlorine on the surface of the polar stratospheric clouds.
• The most important reactions in the destruction of ozone are: HCl + ClONO2 →HNO3 + Cl2 (1)ClONO2 + H2O→HNO3 + HOCl (2)HCl + HOCl→H2O + Cl2 (3)N2O5 + HCl→HNO3 + ClONO (4)N2O5 + H2O→2 HNO3 (5)
When the light returns• Molecular chlorine is easily photodissociated (split by sunlight):
Cl2 + hv→ Cl + Cl• When the sunlight returns to the polar region in the southern
hemisphere spring (northern hemisphere autumn) the Cl2 is rapidly split into chlorine radicals
Ozone chemistry
http://fig.cox.miami.edu/~lfarmer/MSC215/215ATCHM.HTM
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33/36Ozone chemistry (II)
• Catalytic cycle with sunlight
(I)ClO + ClO + M → Cl2O2 + MCl2O2 + hv → Cl + ClO2ClO2 + M → Cl + O2 + Mthen:2 x (Cl + O3) → 2 x (ClO + O2)Overall 2 O3 → 3 O2 and
(II)ClO + BrO → Br + Cl + O2Cl + O3 → ClO + O2Br + O3 → BrO + O2Overall:2 O3 → 3 O2
• The dimer (Cl2O2) of the chlorine monoxide radical involved in Cycle (I) is thermally unstable, and the cycle is most effective at low temperatures. Hence, again low temperatures in the polar vortex during winter are important. It is thought to be responsible for most (70%) of the ozone loss in Antarctica
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34/36Ozone loss and climate
Ozone’s impact on climate consists primarily of changes in temperature.
The more ozone in a given parcel of air, the more heat it retains. Ozone generates heat in the stratosphere, both by absorbing the sun’s ultraviolet radiation and by absorbing upwelling infrared radiation from the lower atmosphere (troposphere).
Consequently, decreased ozone in the stratosphere results in lower temperatures.
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35/36Summary
• Tropospheric ozone– Polutes – Warms atmosphere
• Stratospheric ozone– Protects against uv.– Ozone hole fastest reactions in polar regions
caused by polar clouds in winter and sunlight in summertime
– Ozone hole decreases heat storage in stratosphere, cools
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IPCC Special Report on Safeguarding the Ozone Layer and the Global Climate System Issues related to Hydrofluorocarbons and PerfluorocarbonsApril 2005www.ipcc.ch downloadable as pdf
Sourcesnon-obligatory background material
IPCC Special Report on Carbon dioxide Capture and Storage sept.2005 www.ipcc.chdownloadable as pdf
Climate Change 2001: The Scientific Basis www.ipcc.chdownloadable as pdf
Zevenhoven, R., Kilpinen, P. ”Control of pollutants in flue gases and fuel gases” Picaset (Espoo), 2001 (1st ed.), 2002 (2nd ed.) 2004 (3rd ed.) available at www.abo.fi/~rzevenho/gasbook.html
Thambimuthu, K. , Davison, J. ”Overview of CO2 capture”, presented at GHGT-7, Vancouver Canada September 2004
“Nordic post graduate course on CO2 capture and storage, TKK, Espoo, sept 2005, Ron Zevenhoven lectures 1, 2 and 3
Annual European Community greenhouse gas inventory 1990-2004 and inventory report 2006http://reports.eea.europa.eu/technical_report_2006_6/en
The physical science basis, feb 2007http://www.ipcc.ch/SPM2feb07.pdf summary for policymakers